Early-life interventions to prevent feather pecking and reduce fearfulness in laying hens

Publication date

2023-08

Authors

Kliphuis, SaskiaISNI 0000000506786072
Manet, Maëva W.E.ISNI 000000050682602X
Goerlich, VivianISNI 0000000389801834
Nordquist, RebeccaORCID 0000-0002-8541-5285ISNI 000000038838993X
Vernooij, J.C.M.ORCID 0000-0002-2646-9216ISNI 0000000419500013
Brand, Henry van den
Tuyttens, Frank A.M.
Rodenburg, T.B.ORCID 0000-0002-3371-1461ISNI 000000035787799X

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Severe feather pecking, the pulling out of feathers of conspecifics, is a major welfare issue in laying hens. Possible underlying causes are fearfulness and lack of foraging opportunities. Because early life is a crucial stage in behavioral development, adapting the incubation and rearing environment to the birds' needs may reduce fearfulness and prevent the development of feather pecking. In a 2 × 2 factorial design study, we investigated whether a green light-dark cycle throughout incubation, which resembles natural incubation circumstances more than the standard dark incubation, and foraging enrichment with live larvae during rearing reduce fearfulness and feather pecking and increase foraging behavior of laying hen pullets from an early age onwards. In this 2-batch experiment, 1,100 ISA Brown eggs were incubated under either 0 h of light/24 h of darkness or 12 h of green LED light/12 h of darkness. After hatching, 400 female chicks (200 per batch) were housed in 44 pens (8–10 chicks per pen). During the entire rearing phase (0–17 wk of age), half of the pens received black soldier fly larvae in a food puzzle as foraging enrichment. We assessed fear of novel objects and humans, feather pecking, plumage condition, foraging behavior, and recovery time after a 3-fold vaccination (acute stressor). A slight increase in the number of foraging bouts was only seen with larvae provisioning (rate ratio 1.19, 95% CI 1.02–1.29, P = 0.008). Neither lighted incubation nor larvae provisioning affected fearfulness, feather pecking, plumage condition or recovery time after vaccination. In conclusion, the present study showed no effects of light during incubation and minor effects of foraging enrichment during rearing on the behavior of laying hen pullets. Further research is recommended on other welfare aspects.

Keywords

pullet, chicken, prenatal, maladaptive behavior, stress

Citation

Kliphuis, S, Manet, M W E, Goerlich, V C, Nordquist, R E, Vernooij, H, Brand, H V D, Tuyttens, F A M & Rodenburg, T B 2023, 'Early-life interventions to prevent feather pecking and reduce fearfulness in laying hens', Poultry Science, vol. 102, no. 8, 102801. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2023.102801